u/Reasonable_Ring_6111

Inflația e 6.4%, dar la raft pare 20%. Cum se explică „miracolul” economic din 2026?
▲ 20 r/moldova

Inflația e 6.4%, dar la raft pare 20%. Cum se explică „miracolul” economic din 2026?

Biroul Național de Statistică spune că am ieșit din șocul inflaționist și că avem o cifră oficială de 6.4%. Totuși, dacă te uiți pe bonul de la Linella sau Kaufland, lactatele s-au scumpit cu 11%, iar legumele cu aproape 13%.

Câteva cifre care dor din raportul lunii aprilie:

  • Cartofii: +24.5% (da, ați citit bine).
  • Pâinea: aproape +10%.
  • Salariul real: a crescut cu doar 2.3% — deci tot ce am primit „în plus” s-a dus deja pe mâncare.
  • Coșul minim: Un adult are nevoie de minim 4.750 lei doar pentru mâncare.

Voi cum simțiți „stabilizarea” asta? Mai găsiți produse care s-au ieftinit sau totul e „shrinkflation”?

Analiza completă a datelor BNS vs BNM aici:https://conflict.md/ro/news/inflatia-in-moldova-in-2026-ce-arata-bns-2633

u/Reasonable_Ring_6111 — 21 hours ago
▲ 22 r/moldova

34 years since the War on the Dniester: a detailed look at the 1992 Transnistria conflict and why it remains frozen in 2026

Hey r/moldova,

https://preview.redd.it/md44uv6xk40h1.jpg?width=1200&format=pjpg&auto=webp&s=6f9c7ef3d8469ca4b1b3fcf151df7c2a2607b673

I've spent the last few weeks putting together a detailed analysis of the 1992 war on the Dniester — its causes, the chronology of the fighting, the battle for Bender, and the long-term consequences. The piece is based on OSCE documents, the ECHR ruling on Ilașcu and Others v. Moldova and Russia (2004), memoirs (Lebed's "За державу обидно", Costaș's "Transnistria 1989–1992", Snegur's "Labirintul destinului"), and Memorial archives.

A few things that stood out while researching:

- **It wasn't really an ethnic war.** The 1989 census showed no group had a majority on the left bank: Moldovans 39.9%, Ukrainians 28.3%, Russians 25.4%, Bulgarians 1.9%. The conflict was political and economic, not ethnic — even though it's often framed that way.

- **The 14th Army's role was decisive.** Officially "neutral" until late June 1992, in practice it had been transferring T-64 tanks to PMR forces since mid-May. The 45-minute artillery strike on the night of July 2–3 essentially ended the war.

- **Lebed's arrival changed everything.** Sent by Moscow under the pseudonym "Colonel Gusev" on June 23, he was officially named commander of the 14th Army four days later and integrated PMR forces into a unified command within a week.

- **Bender (Tighina) was the bloodiest single episode.** At least 489 dead in a few weeks of June, including 132 civilians and 5 children.

Full version with sources (in Russian/Romania) — https://conflict.md/ru/news/vooruzhyonnyy-konflikt-v-pridnestrove-1992-prichiny-i-itogi-2361

Questions for the sub:

  1. For those whose families lived through it in Bender, Tiraspol, Dubăsari, Chișinău, or the villages on either bank — what's the gap between what they were told at the time and what they learned later?
  2. Do you think the 2003 Kozak Memorandum was a missed opportunity for reunification, or would the asymmetric federalization it proposed have been a trap?
  3. Has the war in Ukraine since 2022 fundamentally changed how the Transnistria question can be solved — or just frozen it deeper?

Happy to dig into any specific battle, document, or political moment in the comments.

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u/Reasonable_Ring_6111 — 5 days ago